- Nicholas Spiro, Lauressa Advisory
Yesterday, on Thursday September 8, the European Central Bank decided to left interest rates in the single currency area unchanged, but being open for more cuts in the upcoming months and renewed calls to politicians to apply more stimulus for the economic recovery. A s a result, the ECB held the single currency area's main interest rate at zero. Also, the European Central Bank left its 1.7 trillion euro stimulus programme unchanged, brushing off concerns over economic shock waves from Britain's decision to leave the European Union. However, the ECB president Mario Draghi noted that uncertainty over the Brexit was among the factors dampening the Euro zone's growth and he unveiled a slightly weaker economic outlook for the bloc. Although, the ECB did not even discuss extending its 80 billion (per month) asset purchase programme, as president Mario Draghi noted "not so substantial to warrant a decision to act". The ECB President Mario Draghi also stayed that he is concerned over persistently low Euro zone inflation, which has fallen short of the ECB's near-2% target for more than three years. According to the fresh ECB staff forecasts, inflation rising very gradually, to 1.2% next year and 1.6% in 2018.
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